~ Dynamics of Foreign Policy and Law ~ ~Dynamics of Foreign Policy and Law a study of Indo-Nepal Relations


~6 Transit Arrangements between Nepal and India



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~6 Transit Arrangements between Nepal and India
Introduction
Nepal shares a 500-mile border with India which remains open.1 Although Nepal borders on China to the north, it is extremely difficult for Nepal to gain access to the Chinese market and to the sea via Chinese territories as Nepal lies on the southern slopes of the Himalaya. Nepal is surrounded by India from all other sides, i.e. the east, west, and south. Although Nepal has trade relationships with nearly 70 states, the bulk of its trade is either with India or through India. The nearest seaport to Nepal is 1127 km away in Kolkata, India. Nepal could potentially use some of Bangladesh's ports, but Indian territory separates Nepal from Bangladesh. This makes Nepal virtually dependent on India for her access to the sea and international market. In other words, geography dictates the Nepal-India relationship.2
At the moment there is a transit treaty between Nepal and India, but what happens when difficulties arise between the two countries coinciding with the expiry of the treaty? Is the right of free access of landlocked countries established in general international law? If so, does this right operate even in the absence of a transit treaty with the transit state? If not, is this right conditional upon the conclusion of a transit treaty? Is Nepal entitled under international law to as many transit routes as are currently in use? If not, will Nepal's transit right be conditional upon its observance of the 'letter and spirit' of the 1950 treaty or upon Nepal's agreeing to a trade treaty favourable to India? Does international law oblige India to
~negotiate and conclude a new transit treaty with Nepal upon the expiry of the old one? These are the issues that this chapter aims to examine.
The Indo-Nepal Problem from a Legal Perspective
The principal international instruments concerning landlocked states are: the Barcelona Convention and Statute on Freedom of Transit of 1921;3 the High Seas Convention (HSC) of 1958;4 the Convention on Transit Trade of Landlocked Countries of 1965;5 and the Convention on the Law of the Sea (LOSC) of 1982 (which is yet to come into force).6 Both Nepal and India are party to the Barcelona Convention and Statute. Nepal is party also to the 1958 High Seas Convention and the 1965 Convention on landlocked states, but India is not party to these conventions. Although both countries are signatory to the 1982 Convention, neither has ratified it. Thus, so far as the governance of India-Nepal bilateral transit relations by multilateral treaties is concerned, only the Barcelona Convention and Statute seems relevant. This does not explicitly provide a right of free access for landlocked states but provides freedom of transit. While Article 1 of the statute defines the term 'traffic in transit', Article 2 lays down the principle that free transit should be facilitated by the states concerned. It reads as follows:
Subject to the provisions of this Statute, the measures taken by the Contracting states for regulating and forwarding traffic across territory under their sovereignty or authority shall facilitate free transit by rail or waterway on routes in use convenient for international transit.
As both countries are signatory to the 1982 Convention, which inter alia, guarantees the right of free access for landlocked states,7 it could be argued that the signatories are obliged, under Article 18 of the 1969 Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties, to which both Nepal and India are party, 'to refrain from acts which would defeat the object and purpose' of the Convention.8 Moreover, in view of the mandatory character of Article 125 (1) of the LOSC, and the approval of this provision by consensus during the UNCLOS III, the right of free access as embodied in the 1982 Convention could now be regarded as part of customary international law.9
A substantial weight of authority supports the view that the right of free access to and from the sea of landlocked states and the principle of
~freedom of transit are now a part of customary international law, binding on all states.10 This was the view advanced by several landlocked states, including Nepal,11 during UNCLOS III. Scholars too support this view: Fawcett writes that 'a duty to accord freedom of transit on reasonable conditions to another is now a customary rule'.12 According to Lauterpacht, the right of transit exists in international law provided that the state claiming the right is able to justify it by reference to considerations of necessity or convenience and the exercise of the right does not cause harm or prejudice to the transit state.13 He goes on to state that 'When circumstances warranting a claim to transit exist, the legal right to freedom of transit then arises. It exists independently of treaty.'14
The question as to whether the right of free transit is established in general international law has attracted considerable academic debate and a survey of all the arguments advanced for and against it is beyond the scope of this chapter. In so far as our discussion is concerned, India implicitly acknowledged during the 1989/90 crisis that the absence of an agreement did not excuse it from the obligation to provide access. Although P.V. Narasimha Rao, the then Indian minister of external affairs, speaking in the lower house of the Indian parliament on 26 April 1989, stated that as India was party neither to the 1965 Convention on landlocked states nor to the 1982 Convention on the Law of the Sea, 'in matters of transit, India has, strictly speaking, no obligation towards Nepal'. He, nevertheless, acknowledged during the same speech that 'In the field of transit, a landlocked country has a right only to one transit route to the sea under International Law' (emphasis added).15 This was evidenced by the fact that even in the absence of a transit treaty India allowed, albeit under very restrictive conditions and only through two of the 15 transit routes that were in use prior to the expiry of the old treaty, Nepalese exports and imports to and from third countries. As Nepal had launched a publicity campaign to gain support and sympathy from the outside world in its problem with India, Indian officials were making strenuous efforts to convey the message that India did not intend to deny Nepal its right of transit even in the absence of a transit treaty.16 However, what India was saying was that because of its 'special relationship' with Nepal it had been very 'generous' to its neighbour in extending transit facilities and now, as Nepal was intent on changing this special relationship, in the view of New Delhi, Nepal was merely another neighbour like Bangladesh and Pakistan, and, thus, not worthy of 'generous' treatment from India.
~As quoted earlier, according to Indian officials, India was required by international law to provide only one transit route and not the 15 routes enjoyed by Nepal under the 1978 transit treaty.17This assertion on India's part has, however, no legal basis. No international legal rule states that only one route is sufficient. Although Vasciannie18 writes that 'in strict terms, only one transit route is necessary for a landlocked state to reach the sea, and from this it may possibly be argued that additional routes are granted to the landlocked state for reasons other than those relating to its special geographical location, he fails to provide any clue on how he came to this conclusion. He seems to have left out of account the significance not only of Article V of the 1947 GATT (Article V of the GATT rules provides that the right of transit must be allowed 'via the routes [i.e. in plural] most convenient for international transit')19 and Article 2 of the Barcelona Statute on Freedom of Transit (free transit shall be facilitated by states concerned 'on routes in use convenient for international transit').20 Also, other relevant doctrines of international law such as the doctrine of prescription, according to Lauterpacht, 'may be of relevance in determining whether a state is entitled to the continued enjoyment of a means of transit of which the transit: state seeks to deprive it either by outright prohibition or by the modification of the conditions of transit in a manner so unreasonable or onerous as to be tantamount to prohibition'.21
Nepal, for its part, argued that given its shape (Nepal is a narrow strip across India's northern frontier with a 500-mile border with India), geography (the terrain is mostly mountainous with several ranges running at different elevations from east to west and north to south), and the state of economic development (a large part of the country is still remote and not connected by modern means of transport to the capital and other industrial cities), Nepal needs several transit routes for its trade and communications. It is worth noting here that there remain some areas which cannot be reached by rail or road from other parts of the country without going via India. Nepal thus suffers from two geographical handicaps: one, that it is landlocked and the other that it is mountainous in nature without a proper network of modern transportation and communications. Because of this situation, there seems a clear need for several outlets not only for exports and imports, but also for the livelihood of some of the population. Although in ordinary circumstances a need might not justify a legal right, such a geographical need of a landlocked country justifies a
~legal right because the very source of the right of landlocked states is their special geographical situation. As 15 transit routes were in use under the 1978 transit treaty, India seems obliged under the Barcelona Statute to grant Nepal use of all the 15 routes even in the absence of a transit treaty. The words 'routes in use convenient for international transit' were inserted in Article 2 of the Barcelona Statute with a view to laying down that the right of free transit may not be exercised except over routes in existence. Hence, India is not obliged to construct new routes for Nepal but is obliged to allow Nepal's traffic transit through all routes in existence.
On the basis of the provisions of Article 2 of the Barcelona Statute on Freedom of Transit and the other principles of international law and the provisions of international instruments described above, it could be argued that Nepal's claim to several outlets is justified under international law. HSC Article 3(2) requires the transit state to take into account the 'special conditions' of the landlocked state in concluding transit agreements to give effect to the transit right of that state. It appears that if Nepal is able to justify its demand for several routes of transit by reference to considerations of necessity or convenience, India would be obliged to agree on the use of these routes.
Both HSC Articles 3 and LOSC 125 require the transit states to conclude appropriate agreements with landlocked states to give effect to the rights and freedoms they enshrine. However, one could argue that although Article 135 (1) provides for the right of free access for landlocked states, it does not provide independent measures for the implementation of this right as it is tied to freedom of transit. In other words, there is a right of free access for landlocked states but the exercise of this right will be governed by the rules of freedom of transit. Therefore, what seems more important here is the nature and scope of the institution of freedom of transit rather than the right of free access. Paragraph 2 of Article 125 makes this point clearer: the bilateral, sub-regional or regional agreements envisaged under this paragraph are for determining the terms and modalities fir exercising freedom of transit but not for exercising the right of free access to and from the sea.
Nevertheless, as the legal effect of the notion of 'freedom of transit' can be equated to that of a 'right' of transit, the use of the term 'freedom of transit' in the second sentence of paragraph 1 and in paragraph 2 should not be regarded as undermining the legal position of the landlocked states. This is because the notion of freedom of transit also implies that the transit
~state concerned cannot interfere with lawful transit. As the transit state has a legal duty under the institution of freedom of transit to allow lawful passage to landlocked states, the use of the term 'freedom' is, as Vasciannie writes, 'sufficient to ensure that the latter will have an enforceable claim in instances where their access to the sea is barred'.22 Therefore, 'In practical terms, this is equivalent to the result which would have been reached if free transit had been described as a 'right' in Part X.'23
It could therefore be contended that the transit state has a duty to negotiate and conclude a transit treaty with its landlocked neighbour, al­though this argument may sound quite absurd in view of the rule that states, as sovereigns, are free to enter or not to enter into such treaties as they wish. Yet, as Lauterpacht argues, 'practice and precedent have ac­knowledged that in a number of respects the freedom of a State not to conclude a treaty is not absolute. The pactum de contrahendo is a notion familiar to international lawyers as a binding arrangement between states on points to be incorporated in a future treaty.'2
LOSC Article 125(2) requires the conclusion of an agreement between the transit state and landlocked states concerned. After agreeing to the major principle in paragraph 1, the provision of paragraph 2, which contains subordinate procedural arrangements for the realization of the foregoing provision, may have been left open in the understanding that it will be properly implemented in each and every situation according to the principle of pacta sunt servanda. As the terms and modalities differ according to the location and situation of a landlocked state, it is not possible to incorporate all these practical issues in an 'umbrella' convention such as the LOSC. Nevertheless, the words in paragraph 2, 'shall be agreed', are of great significance. The transit state can neither simply delay the negotiations nor impose difficult conditions. The effective exercise of freedom of transit under this convention depends upon the conclusion of appropriate agreements between the landlocked state and transit state concerned providing for the terms and modalities for such exercise. Therefore, it can plausibly be argued that as Article 125 (2) is a pactum de contrahendo, the transit state concerned would be legally obliged to reach an agreement with the landlocked one.
However, a transit state could argue that this provision only requires it to negotiate and not necessarily to come to an agreement if it is not satisfactory to it. As Article 125(2) does not envisage the possibility of the transit and the landlocked state failing to reach an agreement, it does
~not provide an alternative. A problem of this character does not fall under the competence of any tribunals established by the convention. Therefore, the refusal by a transit state to conclude an agreement could cause a serious problem for the landlocked state concerned. This is what actually happened between Nepal and India in 1989, and Nepal had no alternative but to change its policy and concede to the conditions put forward by India. Nevertheless, when a landlocked state s demands are based on past practice or multilateral treaties, the transit state concerned seems obliged to conclude a transit treaty. That appears to be precisely the case between Nepal and India. The latter had concluded a separate transit treaty with the former in 1978 providing for 15 transit routes for Nepal.25
Whether the past practice of these two countries amounts to a local custom26 and whether Nepal is entitled under the concept of local custom to the same facilities as those enjoyed in the past may be a matter for argument, but what is clear is that if Nepal is asking for no more than what it enjoyed in the past under the old treaty, India seems bound not only to enter into negotiations in good faith with Nepal but also to conclude an agreement.27 D.B.S. Thapa, a former law secretary in Nepal, maintains that the 1978 Transit Treaty 'had codified customary practices existing between the two countries from time immemorial'.28 While examining the nature of Indo-Nepal trade and transit relations in the aftermath of the 1970/71 crisis between these countries, Sarup concluded that India was 'under a legal obligation to facilitate and conclude a transit treaty with Nepal'.29
One of the highly publicized issues in the 1989/90 crisis with India was that Nepal wanted to conclude a separate treaty on transit with India, whereas India wished to conclude a separate treaty dealing with all matters of bilateral trade and transit. Strictly speaking, India does not seem obliged to conclude a separate treaty dealing only with transit, provided that it accords Nepal all the transit facilities that she is entitled to under international law and bilateral practice. It is however quite logical to argue that while trade is a periodic arrangement, transit is a necessary permanent condition for international trade for landlocked states and should be treated as such under a separate treaty.30 Then one might ask, should the transit treaty be of permanent character? The answer can be both yes and no.
'Yes', in the sense that as the freedom of transit is recognized in inter­national law, that freedom should be incorporated in a permanent treaty whereby a change of mind of the transit state or the change of the gov­ernment in the transit state would not affect the transit facilities of the
~landlocked country. As being landlocked is a permanent condition a treaty dealing with this condition, should also be of permanent character. 'No', however, in the sense that neither the population nor the economic activities of the landlocked states are static, and their requirements of transit facilities tend to expand. The legal provisions have to keep pace with the changes in technology and science. From a purely legal point of view too, a permanent transit treaty is not necessary if we accept that freedom of transit is established in international law. A freedom already firmly estab­lished does not need new documents to establish it. As I stated earlier, as India recognizes Nepal's right of free access and freedom of transit under international law, there is no need to seek India's commitment through a permanent transit treaty.
Although it may be helpful to insert a clause on freedom of transit in a bilateral treaty of permanent character spelling out the basic nature of the overall relationship between the two countries, a transit treaty that also deals with the terms and modalities of transit cannot be of permanent character. Alternatively, the transit right may be incorporated in a permanent transit treaty, provided that the treaty contains only the basic principles of transit and the details on the terms and modalities of the exercise of this right are incorporated in the protocols attached to it which could be reviewed periodically without affecting the main treaty.
Nepal's Transit Arrangements with India
Background
After India gained independence, a Treaty of Trade and Commerce was concluded by Nepal with India in 1950. Under this treaty India recognized in favour of Nepal 'full and unrestricted right of commercial transit'.31 Although this right was restricted to commercial transit, the facilities provided for such transit were generally favourable to Nepal. The Trade and Transit Treaty of 196032 between the two countries replaced the 1950 Treaty of Trade and Commerce. Although the 1960 treaty also granted Nepal fairly liberal transit facilities, it made Nepal's transit right reciprocal33 and no reference was made to its landlocked character.
When this treaty expired on 31 October 1970, Nepal wished to conclude two treaties, one governing the right of transit and the other dealing with bilateral trade. This was after the adoption of the 1965 New York
~Convention on Trade and Transit of Landlocked States, which recognizes in its preamble transit as a right of landlocked states.34 India, however, wanted both these subjects to be dealt with within a single treaty, maintaining that both were interrelated. As the differences could not be sorted out, Nepal proposed that the status quo of the expired treaty be maintained for another year to enable both sides to hold more talks towards concluding a new treaty. India declined this plea too and, according to Nepalese officials, resorted to pressure tactics by imposing restrictions on the export—import trade with Nepal and even stopped the supply of essential commodities to her. This action on India's part was characterized in Nepal as 'economic blockade'.35
The political background leading up to this crisis seems to have been Nepal's unilateral denunciation in 1969 of a secret arms agreement signed in 1965 with India and Nepal's assertion that the 1950 Treaty of Peace and Friendship had fallen into disuse as India had not consulted Nepal either at the time of the 1962 Sino-Indian armed conflict or during the 1965 Indo-Pakistan war. Nepal had also demanded the immediate withdrawal of the Indian military personnel deployed along Nepal's border with China as well as the Indian Military Liaison Group which had supposedly entered Nepal under the 1950 Peace and Friendship Treaty. Although this uneasy chapter in Indo-Nepal relations ended in the conclusion of a mutual trade and transit treaty on 13 August 1971, Nepal emerged as a clear loser as there was neither a separate treaty on transit nor a recognition by India of Nepal's demand for an overland transit route to Bangladesh (formerly East Pakistan). Nepal lost on other fronts too. For instance, the term 'freedom of transit' was given a narrower meaning than under the previous treaty. India would have the right to take all indispensable measures to ensure that the freedom of transit, accorded by it on its territory did not in any way infringe on its legitimate interests of any kind.36 According to a former foreign minister of Nepal, India, under this treaty, could legally stop transit to Nepal if in its opinion Nepal was importing more than its requirement or exporting more than its available surplus because the freedom of transit was restricted to 'goods required by each contracting party and goods available for export from that party'.37
After the expiry of the 1971 treaty of trade and transit, India and Nepal concluded on 17 March 1978 two separate treaties, one governing transit facilities and the other governing trade. This time Nepal had some reasons to celebrate the conclusion of the treaties. First, Nepal had secured a separate
~treaty on transit, its long-standing demand. Second, the new transit treaty recognized that 'Nepal as a landlocked country needs access to and from the sea to promote its international trade'.38 Third, India agreed to provide Nepal necessary overland transit facilities through Indian territory (known as the Radhikapur route) to Bangladesh. Fourth, while the trade treaty was concluded for five years, the transit treaty was for seven years. This was done with the understanding that both treaties would not expire at the same time and separate negotiations could be conducted for separate treaties. It was hoped that this arrangement would make future negotiations easier and matters of bilateral trade would not creep in during negotiations for a transit treaty.
Nevertheless, India was able to tailor things39 in such a way that not only both trade and transit treaties but also the agreements relating to petroleum products and some other essential commodities expired in March 1989.40 For some weeks chaos reigned in Nepal; the government claimed that no goods were entering Nepal from India;41 all exports and imports were suspended; long queues for essential commodities, including cooking fuel, sugar, salt, and other petroleum products, in cities like Kathmandu brought life virtually to a standstill. Although India stated that two transit routes would be kept open for Nepal's international trade in keeping with international law even in the absence of a transit treaty, owing to administrative confusion and chaos in the aftermath of the expiry of the trade and transit treaties, Nepal's international trade to and from the Indian port of Kolkata was hampered and essential commodities had to be flown in from other countries. Most industries were shut down due to the lack of raw materials and oil. Nepal's GDP, which was growing at 5.7 per cent annually before the crisis was reported to have contracted by 2 per cent in the financial year ending July 1990.
These activities on India's part were described by Nepal as economic blockade, allegations denied by India.42 However, after some weeks, Nepal's transit trade began to flow through the two transit points designated unilaterally for Nepal by India. This no- treaty regime continued for over a year and ended when both sides decided to revert to the status quo ante under a joint communiqué issued at the conclusion of the new Nepalese prime minister's visit to India in June 1990, and this unpleasant chapter was finally closed on 6 December 1991 when the two parties signed two new treaties, one on trade and the other on transit.
~Principal Provisions of the 1991 Transit Treaty43
The Treaty of Transit signed on 6 December 1991 was the second separate transit treaty concluded by Nepal with India and the first one concluded after the overthrow of the panchayat system. The 1978 transit treaty was the first treaty between these two countries solely concerned with transit. Prior to that, transit matters used to be incorporated in single treaties dealing with both trade and transit.
It should be stated at the outset that the 1991 transit treaty repeated, with minor alterations, the provisions of that of 1978.44 The preamble to the treaty recognized that 'Nepal as a landlocked country needs access to and from the sea to promote its international trade'. However, this recognition is diluted by the inclusion in the treaty of the principle of reciprocity. Moreover, the treaty fails to specify that as a landlocked coun­try Nepal has the right to free access to and from the sea or needs access to and from the sea in order to enjoy the freedom of the high seas. Under Article I the contracting parties agreed that:
The Contracting Parties shall accord to 'traffic in transit' freedom of transit across their respective territories through routes mutually agreed upon. No distinction shall be made which is based on flag of vessels, the places of origin, departure, entry, exit, destination, ownership of goods or vessels.
This article makes the transit right of Nepal subject to reciprocity, which is not consistent with the very concept of a right of free access of landlocked states. According to Article 125 of the LOSC, the right of free access to and from the sea is not subject to reciprocity but is unilaterally and solely available to landlocked states.
Article III defines the term 'traffic in transit', but the definition is narrower even than that provided for in the Barcelona Statute on Freedom of Transit, let alone the LOSC. Among other things, the definition excludes persons, accompanied baggage, and most importantly, the means of transport. Article IV exempts traffic in transit 'from customs duties or other charges except reasonable charges for transportation and such other charges as are commensurate with the costs of services rendered in respect of such transit'. Article VII accords, subject to Indian laws and regulations, only to merchant ships sailing under the flag of Nepal treatment no less favourable than accorded to ships of any other foreign country. Although Nepal does
~not at present have any warship, this article should have extended this facility to all ships flying the Nepal flag as Nepal may in the future need warships to protect its commerce and fishing vessels in the high seas and the Indian and, arguably, Bangladesh's EEZ under Article 69 of the LOSC when it enters into force.45
Articles II, VIII and IX of the transit treaty impose several types of limitations on the freedom of transit accorded to traffic in transit. While the limitations of Articles VIII and IX seem justifiable as being broadly in line with international practice, the limitations imposed under Article II raise some questions. This article reads as follows:
(a) Each Contracting Party shall have the right to take all indispensable measures to ensure that such freedom, accorded by it on its territory does not in any way infringe its legitimate interests of any kind.
(b) Nothing in this treaty shall prevent either Contracting Party from taking any measures which may be necessary for the protection of its essential security interests.
The vague words 'all indispensable measures' and 'legitimate interests of any kind' might allow an obdurate government, and especially during friction between two countries, to impose unnecessary limitations on Nepal's transit rights: they should be more specific on 'measures'.46 In the absence of any indication of what may be regarded as 'indispensable measures'47 and 'legitimate interests', India may consider itself free to impose any restrictions deemed 'necessary'48 by it to protect its 'legitimate interests'. In fact, the limitation imposed under Article II (b) suffices to encompass the main purpose of limitations. The limitation imposed under Article II (a) is arbitrary, undesirable, and ambiguous. As the restrictions imposed under Articles VIII and IX of the transit treaty are designed to protect those interests of India which could appropriately be called 'legitimate interests', it is not clear what other interests are intended to be protected under Article II (a).49
Details of port facilities and transit routes are incorporated in a protocol to the Treaty of Transit and exports and imports procedures applicable to Nepal's traffic in transit are outlined in a memorandum attached to the treaty. The protocol designates 15 routes for Nepal's traffic in transit. It allows Nepal to use both Indian rail and road facilities for her convenience. However, in contrast to the 1978 treaty, the 1991 treaty does not provide Nepal any facilities in Haldia. The 1978 treaty had stated that India would
~arrange with the trustees for the port of Kolkata to make suitable land in Haldia available for the construction of facilities for the storage of Nepalese cargo.
Evaluation of the Treaty
On the surface, Nepal seems to have achieved a satisfactory transit treaty with India as the latter conceded to the Nepalese demand for a separate treaty on transit and for 15 transit routes, in contrast to the stance taken by New Delhi during the Indo-Nepal stalemate that under international law Nepal was entitled to only one transit route. India agreed to continue to provide overland transit facilities through Radhikapur for Nepal's trade with or via Bangladesh. This could well be hailed as a success. However, the reality is that the entire exercise on the right of landlocked states during UNCLOS III and the incorporation in the resulting 1982 Law of the Sea Convention of the right of free access of landlocked states does not seem to have influenced the latest treaty. Nor, apparently, has account been taken of other provisions of the LOSC on landlocked states. For instance, the transit treaty disregards not only Article 125(1), but also Article 126 of the LOSC. Nepal has secured neither simplified exports and imports procedures50 nor India's recognition of Nepal's 'right' of free access to and from the sea. No new facility has been added and no new concession secured. Rather, Nepal appears to have lost the facilities available to it in Haldia under the 1978 treaty. Most striking of all is the incorporation in the treaty of the principle of reciprocity. The elimination of the requirement of reciprocity in Part X of the LOSC represented a major breakthrough for the landlocked states, but if a bilateral transit treaty concluded nearly ten years after the conclusion of the LOSC still embodies the principle of reciprocity it could be regarded, from the international law point of view, as disastrous.51
At first glance, Kathmandu's granting of reciprocal transit facilities to India does not sound disastrous so long as India is interested merely in securing general transit facilities in the event of need. In fact, India too is entitled to certain transit facilities under the general principle of the freedom of transit.52 The reality however is that Nepal's exercise of the right of free access to and from the sea should not be made dependent on Nepal's granting similar facilities to India which is not landlocked. It is hardly justifiable to ask Nepal to offer similar facilities in return for something that is available
~to Nepal by virtue of its being landlocked. As the 1991 treaty is intended to provide transit facilities to Nepal for her access to the sea, the reciprocity requirement seems, in practical terms, meaningless, as landlocked Nepal, by definition, lacks the means to reciprocate.53 In fact, India's transit trade through Nepal is nil; it does not actually need to use Nepalese territories for its international trade. India seems to have employed this reciprocity clause merely as political leverage. Moreover, the requirement of reciprocity incorporated in Article 1 of the transit treaty is in conflict with India's own admission in the preamble to the treat)' that 'Nepal as a landlocked country needs access to and from the sea to promote its international trade'.
So far as the Indo-Nepal relationship is concerned, the concept of reciprocity raises numerous issues. As stated earlier, India wishes to tie Nepal's transit right to other issues like bilateral trade, treatment of Indians living in Nepal, India's strategic interests. This is because Nepal and India have a very complex bilateral relationship governed by a number of treaties, some of which are quite ambiguous and outmoded.
Nevertheless, the new transit treaty represents some success for Nepal in the sense that India, a regional superpower and a conservative transit state, agreed after all this legal wrangling to conclude a separate treaty on transit and conceded to the Nepalese demand to have 15 transit routes reinstated by the new treaty. The separation of transit matters from other bilateral issues is vital to Nepal and the new transit treaty has achieved this objective. From this, Nepal can hope that India will not try again in the future to exert pressure on Nepal by mixing the question of transit facilities with other bilateral matters. In that case Nepal's right of access will have been strengthened as a legal right rather than as facilities dependent on the transit state's goodwill.
Notes and References
1. An earlier version of this chapter was published by me in Geopolitics and International Boundaries, Summer 1997, vol. 2, no. 1, 175—96 by Frank Cass publishers, London. I am grateful to Frank Cass for granting permission to repro­duce this chapter in this book.
2. See K. Natwar Singh, 'An Agenda for Talks with Mr Bhattarai', Times of India (7 June 1990), 8.
3. 7 League of Nations Treaty Series, nos. 1—3, pp. 11 Iff.
~4. 450 United Nations Treaty Series, pp. 11-113.
5. 597 United Nations Treaty Series, pp. 42-63.
6. UN Doc. A/CONE 62122, 7 Oct. 1982.
7. Art. 125(1) of the 1982 Convention on the Law of the Sea.
8. The Vienna Convention entered into force on 27 Jan. 1980. See text of the Convention UKTS no. 58 (1980), Cmnd.7964; 8 ILM 679 (1969).
9. Cf. The preamble to the HSC which states that its provisions are 'generally declaratory of established principles of international law' and its Art. 3.
10. See generally, UN, UNCLOS I, Official Records,I, UN DOC. A/ CONF. 13/29 and Add. 1, 31 1ff; M.I. Glassner, Access to the Sea for Developing Land-Locked States (1970); V.C. Govindraj, 'Landlocked States and their right of access to the sea', Indian journal of International Law' (1974), 190; A.M. Sinjela, Land-Locked States and UNCLOS Regime (1983).
11. UNCLOS III, Official Records, 2, p. 238. See also Czechoslovakia, in the Seabed Committee, A/AC. 138/SC. II/SR. p. 56.
12. J. Fawcett, 'Trade and Finance in International Law', Hague Recueil Des Cows, 1 (1968), pp. 215-310, at p. 267.
13. E. Lauterpacht, 'Freedom of Transit in International Law, Grotius Society Transactions, 1958 & 1959, pp. 313-56, at p. 332. See generally, Reid, Interna­tional Servitude in Law and Practice(1932), p. 168; Caflisch,'Land-locked States and their Access to and from the Sea', British Yearbook of International Law (1978), pp. 71—100. Vasciannie, Land-Locked and Geographically Disadvantaged States in International Law of the Sea (Oxford: Clarendon Press 1990), Chapter 8.
14. Lauterpacht, ibid., p. 349.
15. Foreign Affairs Record, 35/5 (New Delhi: May 1989), pp. 131-3. Here it should be noted that at the UNCLOS III, proposals were put forward by the Group of Landlocked and Geographically Disadvantaged States maintaining that the absence of a bilateral transit treaty could not be invoked by transit states to deny the right of free access to landlocked states. Proposals dated 28 April 1976 (in R. Platzoder Third United Nations Conference on the Law of the Sea: Documents 4 [Oceana Publications 1984], p. 332) and ibid. (28 June 1977), 381 at p. 387. As none of these proposals was incorporated in the LOSC, India could have argued that it is not obliged to grant transit facilities to Nepal in the absence of a transit treaty with India but it did not adopt this approach. This may be due to her conviction that transit is a right of a landlocked Nepal as well as the principle, as Freid writes, that 'international law does not permit, except for reasons recognized by it, to harm or, in the extreme case, as it were, to blockade another country by cutting off its transit trade'. John H.E. Fried, 'The 1965 Convention on Transit Trade of Land-Locked States', Indian Journal of International Law 6 (1966) 9—30 at 16.
16. See Times of India (17 April 1989). A similar problem had occurred in
~1970 after the expiry of the 1960 trade and transit treaty with India. At that time too India had unilaterally issued a notification providing for continued trade between the two countries. Notification no. 192-ITC(PN) p. 70 of 31 Dec. 1970, The Gazette, Govt. of India, New Delhi. See in A. Sarup, 'Transit trade of land­locked Nepal', International and Comparative Law Quarterly 21 (1972), 287-306 at 294.
17. See supra note 34. See also Dilip Mukerjee, 'Himalayan Stalemate: Indian Stake in Nepali Goodwill', Times of India (4 April 1989) 4; 'India Rejects Nepal Plea on Treaties', ibid. (27 March 1989), 1.
18. Vasciannie, op. cit., p. 193.
19. 55 United Nations Treaty Series, 187; 210 (1950).
20. Supra.
21. Lauterpacht, op. cit., n. 13, p. 333.
22. Vasciannie, op. cit., n. 13, p. 190.
23. Ibid.
24. Lauterpacht, op. cit., n. 13, p. 347.
25. See also Art. 43 of the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties of 1969 (to which both India and Nepal are party). It states that the invalidity, termination, or denunciation of a treaty does not 'impair the duty of any state to fulfil any obligation embodied in the treaty to which it would be subject under international law independently of the treaty'. 8 International Legal Materials 679 (1969); United Kingdom Treaty Series, no. 58 (1980).
26. See the Case Concerning Right of Passage Over Indian Territory (Merits) I.C.J. Reports, (1960), p. 6. At p. 39 the judgement stated that 'the Court sees no reason why long continued practice between two States accepted by them as regulating their relations should not form the basis of mutual rights and obligations between the two States'. The court then decided that Portugal enjoyed a right of transit for private persons, civil officials, and goods between two of its territories enclaved within India and the coastal district of Daman by virtue of a local custom to this effect.
27. See the judgement of the International Court of Justice in the North Sea Continental Shelf Cases, I.C.J. Reports (1969), p. 47, for the court's opinion on the nature of obligations of states to enter into negotiations with a view to arriving at an agreement.
28. Dhruba B.S. Thapa, 'India-Nepal Relations, Perspectives on Present Prob­lem: A Legal Approach', paper presented at a seminar on 'Transit' organized by the Nepal University Teachers Association, Kathmandu, May 1989, 2. Making a statement on the topic of public importance at a meeting of the National Assembly (Rastriya Panchayat), the then Nepalese foreign minister also asserted that the 15 transit points designated by the 1978 treaty were customary transit
~points. See Nepal and India: Facts and Chronology of the Problem (HMG/Nepal: Department of Printing and Publications, 1989), pp. 88-9.
29. Sarup, op. cit., p. 302.
30. See for a similar argument by the then Nepalese Foreign Minister, S.K. Upadhyay, in 'Nepal Suffers But is Standing Firm', Independent, London, 11 April 1989.
31. Art. I of the treaty. See Bhasin, p. 124.
32. Ibid., p. 125.
33. Art. VII of the 1960 trade and transit treaty provides that 'Goods intended for import into or export from the territories of either Contracting Party from or to a third country shall be accorded freedom of transit through the territories of the other party'. Bhasin, op. cit., p. 127.
34. Principle I of the Preamble of the Convention.
35. Editorial in Rising Nepal, 6 Jan. 1971.
36. Art. VIII of the Treaty of Trade and Transit of 1971. See for text of the treaty (1971), 257 Indian Trade Journal 2132 (380.5 GOV), B-890-9.
37. Shaha, op. cit., p. 132.
38. Preamble to the treaty of transit. See, for text of the treaty, Surya P Subedi, Land-Locked Nepal and International Law (Kathmandu: 1989), pp. 85-112.
39. See Thapa, supra and 'India Rejects Nepal Plea on Treaties', Times of India (27 March 1989), 1.
40. Until this date the trade and transit treaties were being renewed for differing periods after they had expired.
41. 'No Goods From India Enter Nepal for 15th Day' was a front page headline in the government-owned national daily English newspaper Rising Nepal (4 April 1989); Tony Allen-Mills, 'Nepal Suffers But is Standing Firm', Independent (London: 11 April 1989) and the editorial of the same date: 'Coming of Age in India'.
42. The Nepalese ambassador to India said in a press conference in New Delhi on 7 April 1989 that as India was not allowing even essential commodities to enter Nepal this action on her part was economic blockade. However, an Indian external affairs ministry spokesman stated on the same date that An economic blockade of Nepal is the furthest from our intentions'. The spokesman claimed that two transit points were being kept open for Nepal's trade. Times of India (7 April 1989), 7.
43. See for text of the Treaty of Transit, Treaty of Trade and Agreement of Co­operation to Control Unauthorised Trade between His Majesty's Government of Nepal and the Government of India (Kathmandu, Nepal: Nepal Transit and Warehousing Co. Ltd., 1991).
44. See, for an assessment of the 1978 Transit Treaty, Subedi, op. cit., ch. 3.
~45. See Surya P. Subedi, 'The Marine Fishery Rights of Land-locked States with Particular Reference to the EEZ', International Journal of Estuarine and Coastal Law 2/4 (1987), 227-39.
46. For instance, under Article XXI (b) of the GATT the 'essential security interests' which may be protected, must be of very specific character: they must either be '(i) relating to fissionable materials ...' or '(ii) to the traffic in arms, ammunition and implements of war and to such traffic in other goods ... as is supplying the military establishment;' or '(iii) taken in time of war or other emergency in international relations'. Cited in John H.E. Fried, 'The 1965 Convention on Transit Trade of Land-locked States', Indian Journal of International Law 6 (1966), 9-30, at 26. As Fried writes, it is difficult to conceive how it could become 'necessary' for 'essential' security reasons to suspend any of the basic rules of transit. A clause like this does not give a carte blanche to disregard the essentials of the right of transit. Ibid., 26-7.
47. It should, however, be noted that the term 'indispensable measures' used in the transit treaty is much more restrictive than the word 'necessary measures' used in Article 125(3) of the LOSC. Therefore, it can be viewed as a positive indicator from Nepal's perspective.
48. However, as Caflisch writes, 'the reference to "necessary" measures suggests, a contrario that the transit State has no power to take measures which are objectively unnecessary'. Caflisch, op. cit., n. 13, p. 96.
49. Art. 11 of the 1965 Convention on Transit Trade of Landlocked States.
50. See, for a discussion on cumbersome customs and transit procedure, Subedi, op. cit., ch.3. Pilferage of Nepalese goods on Indian railways increases Nepalese export costs. According to a survey, transit costs consume 8 per cent of Nepal's GDP. See Far Eastern Economic Review (8 March 1990), 24.
51. Among other deficiencies of the 1991 transit treaty is the absence of a dispute resolution provision. As the transit dispute has often soured the entire Indo-Nepal relationship as a whole, it was high time to provide for a dispute resolution mechanism in the treaty. As both Nepal and India are party to the Barcelona Convention and the Statute on Freedom of Transit, any dispute arising from matters covered by the statute could be taken for adjudication before the International Court of Justice (ICJ) in accordance with Art. 13 of the statute, which provides that disputes relating to the interpretation or application of the statute could be brought before the former Permanent Court of International Justice (PCIJ), and Art. 37 of the Statute of the International Court of Justice, to which both Nepal and India are party, which states that whenever a treaty or convention in force provides for reference of a matter to the PCIJ, the matter shall, as between the parties to the present statute, be referred by the ICJ. However, there are many matters in the transit treaty which are not covered by the Barcelona Convention and the Statute, and for such matters no international tribunal has
~jurisdiction, unless both states, by special agreement, consent to take the case to an international tribunal or to the ICJ.
52. Art. 2 of the Barcelona Statute on Freedom of Transit provides a general freedom of transit for all states party to it. This general freedom of transit is however limited to transit by rail or waterway.
53. Caflisch, writes that 'The natural and ordinary meaning of the term "reciprocity" in matters of transit would seem to be that if a coastal transit State gives a landlocked country access to and from the sea by granting it rights of transit, that country has to concede the same right to the coastal transit State. This is absurd, for by definition a land-locked State lacks a sea-coast and hence is incapable of giving anyone access to the sea.' Caflisch, op. cit., n. 13, p. 89.
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